HP Announces All-Metal Chromebook 13: Thinner Than MacBook Pro, Costs $800 Less 211
On Thursday, HP unveiled a new Chromebook 13. Designed in collaboration with Google, the Chromebook 13 sports an all-metal body and is merely 13mm thick while weighing 1.29kg. It sports a 13-inch display with 3200x1800 pixels resolution and is powered by Intel's sixth-gen Core M processor, which comes coupled with up to 16GB of RAM. There's a USB Type-C port as well, and the company is also promising up to 11.5 hours of battery life on a single charge. The retail price of the HP Chromebook starts at $499, and will launch in the US later this month.
Apples and Persimmons (Score:5, Insightful)
It ought to cost 800 dollar less, it's a Chromebook.
And an HP.
Re:Apples and Persimmons (Score:4, Informative)
They ought to give it to me for free for being willing to even consider carrying something with an HP logo on it around in public. If it doesn't completely suck, I might be willing to say so. So far, everything I've had from HP since the Kayaks has been hot garbage, and their support has been as well. The support experience is actually the primary reason I won't even consider anything from HP. Never again.
Re:Apples and Persimmons (Score:3)
Might not be so bad if it has the new logo - you can't tell what it says.
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It says bp. It's the British Petroleum laptop.
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That'd be almost funny if British Petroleum had existed in the last decade.
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That'd be almost funny if British Petroleum had existed in the last decade.
http://www.bp.com/ [bp.com]
They may choose to hide the origin of their name, but that's what the B and P stand for.
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I agree with you completely on the support issue.
Trying to get any kind of support from HP is akin to pulling alligator teeth.
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Early Gateways were worse than hot garbage, they were canned crap. But in more recent years they were just made out of commodity parts and they were often actually quite good machines. Same for e-Machines. Acer is a bit of a mixed bag, but in general I've been more happy with them than not. I have a Lenovo C2D right here which is a peach. I'm kind of over Lenovo, though, since they have developed a penchant for BIOS which tries to stop you from doing what you want. So yeah, I agree, most PCs are crap now. H
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Why the fuck are you people buying your PCs off the shelf? Aren't we supposed to build our own rigs?
I bought my SFF lenovo for $50 with a 1TB disk and 4GB RAM. I couldn't buy the RAM for that, new. My other PCs are AMD multicore systems which were built from scratch, I even spray-painted one case to match the other which is fairly nerdly if I do say so myself. Relax.
There are a lot of prebuilt machines floating around out there for little money, and sometimes their prices are compelling at yard sales and the like.
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Oh alright then, carry on.
*salutes*
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I can walk into a MicroCenter and walk out with pieces and parts to assemble a desktop machine. Laptop? Not so much.
Yes, I know of a FEW companies out there doing something like that, but nothing that you will ever see on a store shelf.
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Meh, not had your experience. HP's hardware is cheap, but my PC, my wife's PC, and wife's laptop (all HP) have turned out to be huge improvements on their various predecessors from Gateway, Acer, Lenovo, et al.
I just wish virtually all manufacturers, with the possible exception of Apple, who existed 20 years ago and had a reputation then for quality, weren't so much worse today (that's not a compliment aimed at Apple BTW, their hardware 15 years ago was pretty awful.)
Wow...there's a marketing slogan for you:
"Better than an old Gateway."
Yeah, you'll raise the roof with that one!
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It looks pretty good for the money. You can of course run other operating systems on it. Linux, certainly, maybe even Windows. As a Linux machine it's pretty cheap for the spec.
If anything it seems way over-speced for a Chromebook. Since Android is Linux based it should be well supported for people wanting to run Linux.
Maybe HP (Score:3)
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Actually... no. The default Chromebook loader can only boot Linux. There is no BIOS unless the boot firmware includes one (e.g., the Chromebook Pixel included SeaBIOS). This is required if you want to boot... Windows.
Even then, it's a nasty hack - while you can do it, only geeks will be satisfied with the result. Basically, every tim
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It looks pretty good for the money.
Maybe. But while it will probably get me labeled a blasphemer and heretic on /., I just RTFA (ok, skimmed really). The very next paragraphs starts out by saying the "base model" - i.e. the one with the $500 price tag - will very likely have lower specs, they specifically mention 1920x1080, 4 GB or 8 GB RAM, and probably a lesser CPU. It also mentions that this thing has a whopping 32 GB of storage, presumably flash memory, nor any way to add any other than USB-C.
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It ought to cost 800 dollar less, it's a Chromebook.
And an HP.
Exactly!
And why compare it to a MBP? That should be compared to a MacBook Air, or maybe the new MacBook (non-Pro).
And as the Parent pointed out, IT'S A CHROMEBOOK. It shouldn't be compared to a REAL laptop AT ALL.
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And as the Parent pointed out, IT'S A CHROMEBOOK. It shouldn't be compared to a REAL laptop AT ALL.
Except we can make some useful comparisons, enough to know that the Macbook is ridiculously overpriced.
See "Chromebook".
Fancy terminal, who's main purpose in life is to serve as a(nother) data-mining tool for Google. Locked to a wanna-be OS (unless you are willing to put up with massive annoyance every-single-boot). As I said: NOT a general-purpose computer; therefore, no "comparisons", especially to a MacBook PRO, are warranted nor relevant nor "useful", except as pure Clickbait, and that is true ONLY because the Article mentions Apple.
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It's about where the PC market is going
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Oh yeah? Well I have a Raspberry Pi zero and it's even thinner than your Arduino.
Re:Apples and Persimmons (Score:5, Informative)
The dirty little secret of the laptop industry is that the big-name laptop brands - Dell, HP, Apple, Toshiba, etc. - do not actually make laptops. They're made by Taiwanese companies called ODMs - Original Design Manufacturers [wikipedia.org]. They're like OEMs, except they also design the product. The brand name just slaps it in one of their boxes before re-shipping it to you. About the only thing the brand name tells you is what type of warranty service to expect. The entire industry is very secretive about this, and makes it nearly impossible to tell which ODM actually made each particular model laptop (most brands use multiple ODMs).
The Macbooks are made by Quanta (they're the only ODM Apple is currently using for their laptops; the old plastic Macbooks were made by Asus/Pegatron). Quanta also happens to make most of HP's laptops. This is why all those "laptop reliability reports" which break it down by brand name are bunk.
True...and not true.
The implication of your post is that an HP is not really an HP, but something entirely designed, sourced, and built by another company but with HP's name on it. This is not the case. HP buys components from other companies, and other companies often do the manufacturing...but the design of the laptop, its specifications, and essentially everything that determines how good it is are entirely HP's doing. The same is (clearly) true of Apple. The fact that the manufacturing is outsourced isn't really germane; you'll never have an Apple and HP computer that, side-by-side, are entirely interchangeable.
Disclaimer: I used to work for HP. Please don't hold it against me...
Re:Apples and Persimmons (Score:4, Informative)
The Macbooks are made by Quanta (they're the only ODM Apple is currently using for their laptops; the old plastic Macbooks were made by Asus/Pegatron).
Sorry, no.
No doubt that Quanta does lots of ODM work for those generic Wintel laptops; but Apple laptops are designed by Apple, period; have been for years.
Quanta is simply a Contract MANUFACTURER used by Apple to BUILD MacBooks. Has been for years.
Same thing for Asus/Pegatron. Contract MANUFACTURER Only.
You apparently don't understand the difference between DESIGN and MANUFACTURING. I can find NO reference to Apple using either of those companies for anything other than Contract MANUFACTURING, not DESIGN work.
Prove me wrong.
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They are Designed in California by Apple.
Yada yada. Whooie.
But what I find suspiciously absent is the PROOF they are NOT.
And they have nicer retail displays, just like Bose sound equipment.
They also have (much) nicer industrial design and manufacturing, at the very least. I'm not sure what you mean by "nicer retail displays", though. Are you referring to the Apple Retail Stores? If so, I don't get the comparison to Bose, who, to my knowledge, doesn't have any Retail Stores of their own.
And there is a VAST difference between Bose's quality and Apple's. I know. I
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You don't understand the difference between "makes" and "designs".
As an embedded Developer with almost 40 years' PAID experience and several industrial product designs under my belt, I think I DO understand the difference, COWARD.
The first product I designed the software and most of the hardware for (it employed an already-built power-electronics assembly, but I did the controller design and and all the software), back in 1989, we used a Contract Manufacturer, because we didn't have SMT fabrication facilites in-house. And since that time, I think I have done the softwar
Absurd fiction. (Score:3)
Apple designs their own laptops. Obviously they sub-contract manufacturing, but they clearly don't just slap an Apple label onto some rickety ODM crap.
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Yep, stopped reading at HP.
Chromebook? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Chromebook? (Score:4, Insightful)
Odds are you will see a Windows version of the same machine. I just hope you can put Linux on this one or the Windows version... Oh and that the touchpad does not suck.
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Very much agree. You could even cover up the HP logo with an Ubuntu sticker.
Re:Chromebook? (Score:5, Informative)
i do not like limitations of ChromeOS but it is currently the ONLY way to get a haswell/broadwell/skylake laptop with linux with proper power management. i've yet to see a non-chromeos laptop that can enter a state lower than PC3 (package state, not core).
https://www.reddit.com/r/linux... [reddit.com]
https://www.reddit.com/r/linux... [reddit.com]
so I, for one, am interested in this new chromebook. i currently have a haswell chromebook with crouton installed and i have never experienced such battery life with a linux machine before (not even on dell sputnik). it's a crappy cheap machine but i'm finding myself using it almost exclusively these days. it's the first computer i can leave the house with while leaving the charger at home.
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are you sure you're looking at the leftmost column in powertop's "Idle Stats"? what you're saying should not be possible. things are slowly starting to move in 4.6 kernel ( http://git.kernel.org/cgit/lin... [kernel.org] ) . it should not be possible with 4.4.7.
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well, i envy you. my nuc with i5-4250u has never gone past PC2.
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Oh and that the touchpad does not suck.
All touchpads without separate click buttons suck, it's only a question of degree.
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Oh and that the touchpad does not suck.
All touchpads without separate click buttons suck, it's only a question of degree.
What about "touchpads" (trackpads) that have the entire touchpad as a "clicky" button, ala Apple? They are widely regarded as having the hands-down (no pun) best trackpads in the industry, by a very wide margin.
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What about "touchpads" (trackpads) that have the entire touchpad as a "clicky" button, ala Apple?
Suck.
They are widely regarded as having the hands-down (no pun) best trackpads in the industry, by a very wide margin.
Seems like a very low bar.
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What about "touchpads" (trackpads) that have the entire touchpad as a "clicky" button, ala Apple?
Suck.
They are widely regarded as having the hands-down (no pun) best trackpads in the industry, by a very wide margin.
And who, pray tell, do you think makes a better Trackpad than Apple?
Seems like a very low bar.
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i totally agree, with a little addendum. buttons should be above the touchpad and the touchpad itself should be disabled. nipple FTW.
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Odds are you will see a Windows version of the same machine. I just hope you can put Linux on this one or the Windows version... Oh and that the touchpad does not suck.
I already runs Linux. It just so happens that ChromeOS sits on top of it.
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True but meant a full linux distro like Mint vs Chrome
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Chrome OS is Linux (and if you don't like the Chrome UI, a normal DE is just a chroot away [howtogeek.com]). Are you saying Linux isn't a real OS?
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Are you saying Linux isn't a real OS?
I infer that the claim is that most people need and can securely maintain Windows, rather than ChromeOS. A rather dubious claim, in my experience.
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Until someone presses Space while the machine is booting, which disables developer mode and erases your chroot.
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I think Chrome OS might get interesting very soon, namely because you'll be able to run Android apps in multi-window mode. And given that mobile is all the app rage lately, I don't think you'll find an kind of shortage of things to do on it.
Not that I'll buy this machine mind you, just that Chrome OS *may* see a sudden uptick in consumer demand.
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I think Chrome OS might get interesting very soon, namely because you'll be able to run Android apps in multi-window mode. And given that mobile is all the app rage lately, I don't think you'll find an kind of shortage of things to do on it.
Not that I'll buy this machine mind you, just that Chrome OS *may* see a sudden uptick in consumer demand.
Oh, boy! What a wonderful thing: To be able to run scaled-down, bullshit mobile Apps on your "real" computer.
I simply don't see the attraction. Mobile Apps are for when we need to do things on-the-go; they are RARELY good examples of real, robust Applications (not "Apps").
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Oh, boy! What a wonderful thing: To be able to run scaled-down, bullshit mobile Apps on your "real" computer.
You probably say that because you have only a narrow understanding of what people actually do with computers, complicated by a narrow understanding of what Android apps can do (my guess is that you're used to iphone apps, which are deliberately limited in scale and functionality by Apple.)
I simply don't see the attraction. Mobile Apps are for when we need to do things on-the-go; they are RARELY good examples of real, robust Applications (not "Apps").
If you give somebody a reason to scale up those apps, they will. In case you haven't noticed, Android allows app developers to modify the look and feel of the app depending on the screen size, which can go anywhere from a
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It sounds almost like an iPad pro, doesn't it. Except a lot cheaper and a lot less locked down. Less stupid-proof, though, which probably gets some people nervous.
No. An iPad Pro is still an iPad, and makes no claims to be otherwise. It just has a couple of unique features (compared to the "non-pro" iPads).
Having said that, I do believe it is really a Development Platform for Apple internally to play around with migrating OS X to ARM (and with Touch support). But that's just a guess on my part.
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Exactly. The MacBook Pro comes with a real OS, this Chromebook is just an advertising delivery system. Yes, it is good value, but unless you can open it up for real applications, it is not actually a computer.
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It's a cheap and (probably) good Linux machine.
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And a lot of Macbook users are Unix users (Score:2)
Another segment of Macbook users have Mac because it's a well-supported Unix, on consistently decent hardware. Assuming I can install Linux or another OS of my choice on this Chromebook as easily as I have on others, I may be interested.
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Re:Chromebook? (Score:5, Insightful)
If you're asking, you aren't going to like the answer, but I'll try anyway.
Like many /.'ers I do support for family. Guess which laptops and computers get screwed up? Windows of course. If I don't want to have to fix stuff on a regular basis, I rule Windows out immediately. Macs seem a bit pricey but I could get over that, the problem I have is that typically people find it hard to use at first, which for some of my family translates to forever. (One of the people I support gets quite upset if Internet Explorer isn't on the page he left it on.)
You know what doesn't get screwed up? Chromebooks. I can hand one to a nine year old niece or to her grandmother and they'll be able to do everything they want and it won't be messed up when they hand it back. We have two that we keep on hand for just that sort of purpose. They're both cheap and a few years old, and they still keep up with all that their target audience asks of them.
At this price though, this wouldn't be for my niece or her grandmother. This would be a Chromebook for me. I'm a veteran of OSs ranging from Xenix to Microsoft Server 2012, so I feel comfortable with pretty much whatever. About the only question that matters to me when I pick an OS for my own use is how much effort it will require.
In years past, I would compile my own custom kernel and tweak optimizations for all the software I ran which made me a big fan of Gentoo and FreeBSD, and I'd spend hours tweaking Blackbox. These days? I take the easy and fast route for most things. My current desktop dual boots Windows 10 and Mint and most of my servers run CentOS. If I'm working, I'm either on a remote command line or in a remote desktop, so what good does Windows or Linux or Mac on the laptop do for me? The only thing I ask of my local computer most of the time is that it render web pages well and not give me grief over streaming videos when I'm taking downtime.
So this is a tempting laptop for me. It would do everything I need in a snappy fashion, including running video on my real displays and take zero maintenance. That's what makes Chromebooks most appealing, they don't take effort. Plus, with this higher level of hardware, if I ever decided I needed something else, I'd just put Linux or BSD on it and it'd be as good for the money as most of the alternatives I might have purchased.
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Can I ask the reason, with that much power, not to include a real OS? Also it's disingenuous to name high specs, then say "starting at $lowprice", and THEN say the low specs that go with the low price. That smells like slashvertising.
Because it's not for you. This is for someone who wants an iPad with a built-in keyboard.
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Yeah. The way they wrote that really sucks. Here's what you ACTUALLY get for $499: "Entry-level models will likely* have lesser specs: the laptop can be configured with a 1920 x 1080 pixel display, 4GB or 8GB of RAM, and processor options including Pentium 4405Y, Core M3, and Core M5 processor." So $499 gets you a 1080p screen and 4 GB and whichever processor is worst on that list. In other words, it gets you a $499 laptop.
* and who the fuck put "likely" in there? How about "absolutely definitely"!? :-/
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why could you not install your own OS?
Because every time a Chromebook is turned on, its firmware begs the user to wipe the hard drive and reinstall Chrome OS.
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First of all no it doesn't, all you do is ctrl-D for chrome or ctrl-L for a bootloader
That's fine if you turn it on, not so fine if someone else power-cycles it.
Second of all, you can just remove the hardware protection and put a complete chrome free bios on it.
On all of them?
Costs less but (Score:2)
Does commensurately less too. It isn't as doorstop-worthy as one of those 32GB MS cloud-traps, but I still pity those who buy this.
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Does commensurately less too. It isn't as doorstop-worthy as one of those 32GB MS cloud-traps, but I still pity those who buy this.
I don't, I'll probably pick one up instead of another tablet. Battery life, weight, usable keyboard, decent screen. Perfect for travelling. Good enough for a school computer and you won't cry too much if it gets dropped. Of course it will be running Linux not brain damaged Android. For printing and bulk storage you use wifi or usb.
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You have to reinstall a Linux distribution if you want the full GNU/Linux toolset.
Duh.
And if you do that, you get a nag screen every time you boot it saying your OS isn't secure, and asking to reinstall chrome OS.
press ENTER to turn off VERIFICATION [howtogeek.com]
Shill much? (Score:5, Insightful)
Comparing this to a MacBook Pro is like comparing a Chevy Spark to a BMW 7-series. The MacBook Pro is Apple's big-boy-pants laptop with a real i5 or i7 processor, and a real OS. This has a Core m processor and ChromeOS. Not even close to the same thing, and nobody who'd be happy with one would even consider the other.
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Yeah but this one is also thinner than the thickest laptop apple makes. Its innovative!
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As a smooth person, I'm triggered by the word "chunky".
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Those "real" processors are still mobile processors.
But what does it matter when it's driver is OS X? May as well put grandma in the driving seat of your BMW 7.
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If you equate OS X with grandma driving the BMW 7, then it's a dead squirrel driving the Spark with ChromeOS.
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MacBook's not Wintel, but it's still Intel, so there's no reason you need to have OS X on it. I slapped Ubuntu 16.04 on the recent-model MacBook Pro supplied by my employer, and now it works great and is easy to use.
Well, other than the stupid fucking buttonless touchpad...
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I made no complaint about Ubuntu's support for the touchpad, dipshit AC. Multi-touch scrolling etc. works fine.
It's just a fucking crappy touchpad, full stop. It has no real buttons--like I said the first time.
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Comparing this to a MacBook Pro is like comparing a Chevy Spark to a BMW 7-series.
Right, a BMW 7xx with one door.
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Re:Shill much? (Score:5, Informative)
I'm wondering if some manufacturer will notice this, and stick a Core M in their laptop with a regular-sized cooler, to effectively give you a "cheap i7" (only difference between the mobile dual core i7 and i5 is 4MB vs 3MB cache).
The major distinguishing features of the MBP are:
The MBPs are extremely good tools for the intended audience, and I recommend them in a heartbeat for anyone in those fields (graphics artists, photographers, videographers). But for anyone else, you're wasting a lot of money on features which won't benefit you in any way.
Piece of paper (Score:5, Funny)
Much MUCH thinner than the HP all-metal chromebook, and costs $500 less.
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And the battery will never leak or explode.
Re:Piece of paper (Score:4, Funny)
And it has two sides! It dual-boots!
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Sony makes paper now?
There's a USB Type-C port (Score:5, Funny)
That's good. I was worried there would be no place to plug in my headphones
Lame (Score:5, Funny)
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Except this actually has wireless AND more space than a nomad, so I guess we finally have a device which isn't lame.
Simpsons: even submitting to Apple beats HP (Score:2)
http://www.dailymotion.com/video/xvfbpq_simpsons-hp-joke_fun
Misleading Trash Article (Score:2, Informative)
From TFA
"Entry-level models will likely have lesser specs: the laptop can be configured with a 1920 x 1080 pixel display, 4GB or 8GB of RAM, and processor options including Pentium 4405Y, Core M3, and Core M5 processor."
That's the entry-level model that costs $800 less, not the one you're advertising, you fucking shill.
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Yeah, as misleading as the "Flight deals from $59!*"
*$59 flight only available to the airport that is an hour drive away and would be stupid to actually fly to.
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I think you missed the point. He was referring to the case that the DESTINATION airport was only an hour drive away.
Could you put Linux on it? (Score:2)
I bought a Samsung Chromebook for $150. I am happy with it. Inexpensive, no fuss, fast boot, battery lasts all day and then some.
I could run Linux on it, but I am happy with it the way it is.
From HP huh? (Score:2)
Wow, at $499 that is a very expensive doorstop.
I wouldn't let my dog own anything from HP. My how far the mighty have fallen............
Brave boys, designating it 13... (Score:2)
wonder how loud the fight was to go straight to 14.
All metal (Score:5, Funny)
"Thin" is not a feature (Score:3)
Beyond a certain point, "thin" stops being a feature. We reached that point long ago. The sacrifices that laptop developers are making to create these ultra-thin laptops are a huge step backwards for computing. User replaceable disks/ram/keyboard/motherboards/anything was a fairly common feature of many laptops until this ultra-thin craze started. I've physically broken every laptop I've ever owned at least once. A laptop with everything soldered onto the motherboard and practically hermetically sealed, will be a paperweight in a year for a heavy use laptop user. But, maybe that's the plan. Sell people easily destroyed, non-fixable but very fancy looking junk and hope you can sell them even fancier looking junk next year when their laptop stops working.
Advertising and fanboy trolling in one! (Score:2)
Good job /.
Not only does this read like a paid advertising piece, you've also managed to work in Apple in the oddest way possible.
Enjoy both your paid-for-story cash and the added ad spike from starting yet another fanboy fight.
a potato costs almost $2,000 less than a macbook! (Score:2)
$499 for a Chromebook!!!! WTH (Score:2)
I thought the point of a Chromebook was to make it affordable by making it a stripped down and not needing a powerful CPU. 32 GB eMMC is pretty stripped down, and Pentium. So you're paying a premium for thinnest while having none of the advantages of a full OS. Explain to me why I want this over a tablet or a laptop with a full OS? Plus, it's an HP. I've never had an HP laptop last more than 2 years.
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You are being conditioned to think that everything that does not cost four digits, meaning $999 or less, is affordable.
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The real question (Score:2)
Is ... can I run DragonFly on it? Or is the BIOS locked to Chrome ? If this baby has the normal write-protect screw / developer mode BIOS features that allow us to run whatever we want on it instead of being locked to chrome, then great!
We've had great success with the older Acer C720[P] (running a mobile haswell cpu) running DragonFly. So if one of these new HP Skylake-m babies allows me to cut into the dance then I'll give it a big thumbs up.
I'll have to buy one to find out, I guess.
-Matt
Is it just me? Or has thinness gone too far? (Score:2)
I would always rather have more battery capacity and a real USB jack than thinness.. Just don't get the attraction.
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Keyboard can be strange. I have an old Toshiba R500. It is not the thinnest, but certainly the lightest laptop I ever had, just around 1kg. And the keyboard is actually quite excellent. Recent laptops just don't seem to have the same quality.
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I have a working thinkpad t43 sitting on my desk covered in dust... it runs like a champ unfortunately upgrading from xp pro to win 7 would be a pain and it would probably barely run afterwards.
Re:USB-C port (Score:4, Informative)
I believe, with the exception of the printer, the answer is yes to all of your questions.
And if your printer was built in the last couple of years, there is a good chance it supports Google Cloudprint, allowing you to print to it any time your Chromebook is connected to the network. No need for any wires.
If you have an older printer, you'll need a helper application to run on another computer though. So, yes, that's a little awkward but it is a problem that will go away over time, as hardware gets updated.
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Having had a couple of chromebooks in the house over the past few years, it became painfully apparent that the UI was going to some lengths to try and pretend that there wasn't a file system. This is what made them useless for me. Moving files between two devices became a process of sending them via Google.
My MBP doesn't do that to me. My PC doesn't do that to me. My work laptop doesn't do that to me.
My phone does do that to me but it's easy to work around.
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If you legitimately need Photoshop, then no, a Chromebook is not for you.
But realistically, very few people need Photoshop, nor can they afford it; and if they did, they wouldn't use it on a laptop, but have a properly calibrated monitor in a room with properly controlled lighting.
For everybody else, times have moved on, and web based photo services have gotten surprisingly powerful. For better or for worse, a consumer or even prosumer is often better off using those services, then shelling out mega-bucks t